Thanks, Bob. Maybe I’m not sending my emails to the proper person. If you have
an address that gets response, I’d love to have it.
On Jan 5, 2021, at 11:38 AM, Bob Kopman (Redacted sender "rlkopman" for
DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Archie artist attribution is a topic that interest me.
I've notified Heritage several times in the past when I was sure that their
description was in error. They've usually corrected it.
In general, if they don't know, I'd prefer that Heritage list a piece as
artist unknown rather than attributing to an artist.
I've also been contributing to GCD data for Archie art, when I'm sure about
the artist.
Best,
Bob
On Tuesday, January 5, 2021, 11:32:22 a.m. EST, Rodrigo Baeza
<rodrigobaeza2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 5, 2021 at 12:37 PM Bill Morrison <bill.littlegreenman@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bill.littlegreenman@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
I’ve noticed a disturbing trend in auctions of Archie art at Heritage.
Several lots have listed "Dan DeCarlo (Attributed)” as the artist when the
art is clearly by another artist and shows no sign of Dan even touching it.
I’ve emailed Heritage about these errors but to no avail. I’m wondering if
they have someone in-house who does the attributions of art, or are they just
taking the word of the person who’s putting the art up for auction?
As George H. says, they rely a lot on GCD data. So when that data is
incomplete or incorrect, they end up with incorrect auction listings. I've
noticed, however, that they put more effort on accurately identifying pages
(artist, date, original publication) in their bigger, Signature auctions.
(The weekly Sunday/Monday auctions on the other hand seem to be assembled
more quickly, therefore having a larger percentage of errors.)
I send them corrections regularly: my latest was a few weeks ago, when I
informed them that what they'd listed as a "1950s Jungle Jim" page by
"Unknown" was actually a Blackhawk page by Reed Crandall (this apparently
happened because the consignor didn't know much about the art he was
selling). They do show a bit more resistance when I inform them of fakes or
forgeries (anyone remember those double-sided pieces of art from a couple of
years ago that were offered as "Keeping Up with the Joneses" dailies, but
were in fact amateur tracings of Barney Google strips?), but most of the time
they do process the corrections I send.
Rodrigo